AI Adoption stories
Nearly half of larger Asia Pacific firms have deployed AI PCs, while 95% expect workstations to be vital for AI work within two years.
The revamp puts AI agents into everyday workflows for 250,000 customers as monday.com seeks to turn a work tool into a broader platform.
Most firms are now running AI in production, with hybrid clouds and security controls becoming crucial as inference overtakes training.
Rising enterprise demand in Asia Pacific and Japan is prompting Cursor to build a regional hub in Singapore and recruit local staff.
Businesses can now retain customer context across voice, messaging and AI hand-offs as Twilio broadens its engagement platform.
Enterprise customers using PolyAI’s Agent Studio should see easier onboarding and tighter governance as Kong Konnect underpins its API scale-up.
The tie-up aims to help firms scale AI agents with better governance, tracing decisions and proving business impact beyond pilot projects.
Creative teams may spend less time shuttling files between apps as Flora adds 21 on-canvas editing tools and switches to dollar-based billing.
Many firms still lack AI training, even as 85% of accountants say they are excited about it, prompting a new peer forum from Karbon.
The hires are intended to help EvoluteIQ convert its USD $53 million investment into faster international growth and stronger customer demand.
Law firms can now automate more routine work as the platform adds off-the-shelf tools and customisation for specialist legal workflows.
Enterprises in regulated sectors can now query sensitive data in place, as Cloudera says the new ServiceNow link cuts duplication and compliance risk.
Universities and colleges facing budget strain may get more AI support as the company expands its education push with a senior hire.
Data analytics and science vacancies are proving hardest to fill, as 95% of Singapore employers report shortages despite a wider talent pool.
Due diligence is speeding up as purpose-built AI data rooms cut manual review and help buyers and sellers handle complex transactions faster.
More than half of public sector IT staff say artificial intelligence has added work, as fragmented systems and policy gaps complicate adoption.
A lack of visibility is leaving many European organisations unable to tell whether AI-powered attacks have already breached their systems.
European developers can now access a single-model image API that Luma says should cut latency and improve consistency across visual workflows.
Concern is growing over who controls AI decisions, even as 74% of UK consumers have used the technology in the past six months.
Most Australians would adopt AI sooner if tougher safeguards were in place, yet only 1% say they completely trust the technology.